Industrialist Ratan Tata's request for an investigation into the leak of audio tapes in 2010 involving former corporate lobbyist Niira Radia will be heard today in the Supreme Court, after a gap of eight years.
The petition was filed in 2011 and was last heard by the Supreme Court in 2014.
Ratan Tata has said the leak of the tapes, involving his conversations, infringed on his right to privacy.
Niira Radia's phone conversations with industrialists, journalists, government officers and other people holding key posts were tapped as part of a tax investigation over a decade ago. Her public relations firm, Vaishnavi Corporate Communications, which no longer exists, also counted industrialist Mukesh Ambani among its clients when her phones were tapped first in 2008 and then in 2009.
In August 2012, Ratan Tata had asked the Supreme Court for a copy of the report submitted by the government explaining how the tapes - the controversy which later came to be known as the "Radia tapes" - were leaked.
Ratan Tata's conversations with Niira Radia were among those carried by the media in 2010. He then took the government to court arguing that the release of the tapes amounted to infringement on his right to privacy.
In a landmark verdict, the Supreme Court in August 2017 had said that privacy is a constitutional right. Nine judges were unanimous in their finding, though they cited different reasons for their conclusion.
The verdict on the right to privacy was also a major setback for the government, which had argued that the Constitution does not guarantee individual privacy as an inalienable fundamental right.
The then Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad had claimed that judges have agreed that "privacy as a fundamental right is subject to reasonable restrictions."
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